Ascendant Saga Collection: Sci-Fi Fantasy Techno Thriller by Brandon Ellis (easy to read books for adults list txt) π

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- Author: Brandon Ellis
Read book online Β«Ascendant Saga Collection: Sci-Fi Fantasy Techno Thriller by Brandon Ellis (easy to read books for adults list txt) πΒ». Author - Brandon Ellis
The overhead light switched from daylight white to ombre redβbattle ready.
βShields?β Gentry was on his feet, faster than any of his crew.
βWeβre at eighty-two percent,β Bogle replied.
Another shudder brought Gentry to his knees. βLetβs make rain.β
βRGSS-2βs online, Sir.β His weaponsβ chief was all over making it rain on Callisto. At the touch of a button, RGSS-2βRail Gun Space-to-Surface Second Generationsβpopped lead slugs the size of missiles, from Star Wardenβs starboard side. Theyβd prepped for hostile alien encounters and knew how to pound those snot-nose, tentacle-waving, one-eyed monstrosities back into whatever steaming pile of sludge theyβd crawled out of. When RGSS-2βs hit, they hit twice as hard as anything else Star Warden, or any Earth-made space craft, had in their arsenal.
Star Warden rattled as slug after slug ejected out of her barreled cannons, sending a constant vrum vrum vrum through the battery walls to the remainder of the ship. The vibration caught Gentry off guard. He sat in the admiralβs chair and gripped the armrests, knuckles white.
Bogle brought up the targeted turrets on the view screen. The rail gun could shoot a hundred slugs a minute, but once spent the chambers would be empty until the ship made it to a space armory to load up again. It was a one-time bombardment and always did the trick.
Until now.
Callistoβs guns switched targets and blasted the blue electric cannon bolts at the RGSS-2 slugs, turning them to dust on contact. Not a single slug reached Callistoβs surface. For the first time in fleet history, theyβd failed to make rain. Now they floated slugless against an enemy that could withstand their heaviest weapons.
The crew looked to Gentry, who studied the screen. Everything below was at peace again.
βFire the plasma cannons. Give βem all we got.β
The turrets below wouldnβt be able to incinerate plasma. The PCβs, plasma cannons, werenβt as devastating as the railgun, but they had the advantage better accuracy. It would take longer, but Star Warden would prevail.
Callistoβs turrets rotated, their cannons extended and raised, locked onto their targetβStar Warden. It had to be a trick of the light, because the muzzles appeared to balloon three-times their original size and what metal was capable of that? Gentry didnβt have time to think it through because in seconds, thousands of electric-bolts burst from the cannon and pounded the Star Carrier. The bridgeβs view screen blinked in and out, the bolts zapping needed energy from the carrierβs core, somehow draining the heart of the ship. Gentry jostled in his chair. Sweat dripped from his reddening face, and he leaned forward with a clenched jaw. βKeep firing.β
Star Wardenβs PCβs blasted turret after turret. The turrets exploded into fire blossoms then twisted into melted rubble.
It counted for squat.
Once a turret went offline, another turret popped up in its place, shooting volleys at Star Warden.
Another shutter. βSir, shields are below fifty percent.β Panic filled Bogleβs eyes, something Gentry had never seen before.
βThat low?β
βTheyβre sucking the life energy from our shields.β
Another hit and Gentry snapped to. For weapons to damage Star Warden like this was unusual, especially from turrets. βKeep targeting and continue to pound them. Lock ballistics on the pyramids. Letβs shut off their grid, render the turrets useless.β He massaged his temple. If their shields went down, they were burnt toast.
On Callisto, a turret exploded and another popped up next to it, sending more blasts toward Star Warden.
βA dozen intermediate space to ground ballistic missiles on their way planet-side,β said Bogle.
Gentry pursed his lips. βGood.β
One by one, the turrets turned the missiles into useless debris clouds.
βFire again.β
The same results.
The ship vibrated and Gentry grimaced. βShields?β
βEighteen percent. This isnβt looking good, Admiral.β
βWhy are we losing shields so quickly?β
Gentry had never seen Star Warden under fifty percent shields, let alone under twenty percent. He furrowed his brow and Star Warden shook again. He let out a shallow breath. Only one logical choice. He gave the order without a shred of emotion, though his guts roiled.
βAbandon ship.β
If it had been permitted, heβd have doubled over and vomited all over his own shoes, but there was no time for sentimentality. He needed to get his crew to safety. βSet evacuation procedures immediately.β
The turret fire from Calisto stopped and quiet filled the bridge.
Gentry stared straight ahead at the view screen. Callistoβs silence could mean a million different things, but his gut told him it didnβt mean surrender. He was about to do something that galled him, but it was necessary. A good commander knows when to attack and when to retreat. They were outgunned. It was time. βBack us up. Weβre heading to the fleet.β
βShields regenerating to twenty-one percent,β Bogle said. βWeβre doing well.β
βDid you say well? We got the piss kicked out of us. Another minute and weβd be in our evacuation crafts, watching Star Warden being ripped apart.β
βTwenty-three percent, now, Admiral.β
βThank you.β He stroked his cheek. His eye on a pyramid showing on the screen. Nothing beautiful or special about it, other than it gave off a reading that screamed impossible. It could power New York City.
Whoever was down on Callisto was more dangerous and more powerful than any race or species heβd ever come across, including his own.
Gentryβs face hardened and his eyes grew cold. This group on Callisto had to be stopped. In fact, they had to be eliminated. Any race this strong was a direct threat to human survivalβto Earthβs survival. He couldnβt turn tail and run. He had to obliterate them.
He leaned forward. βReady nuclear heads.β
Bogle tilted her head. βWe canβt do that, Sir.β
βWe can and we will. Launch when ready.β
Bogle abandoned her post and rushed to Gentryβs side. βThereβs an archaeological and resource goldmine down there. Call it off. Weβll come back after weβve had more time to think about our next action.β
Gentry crossed his arms. A fire welled in his stomach. βDo not second
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